For Quality, Service Design WE'RE YARDS AHEAD OF THE COMPETITION Intelligence Brass Propose Withdrawal • writ i ► lio PK' , PI 1 1 1 /11 11 1141 11 LANDSCAPING, INC. Complete Landscape Specialists 398.7800 Residential/Commercial Design. ■ Construction ■ Renovation ■ Commercial Maintenance & Snow Removal ■ ■ Kenneth Eit Michael Shecter It1114LA 110.*1.113.1.01C.05.03,704 Studio in Harvard Row Mall Exercise regularly. 50%-70% OFF WERE FIGHTING FOR YOUR UFE •Vertical Blinds • Pleated Shades • Levolor Blinds • Wood Blinds 11111111teptis 21728 W. Eleven Mile Rd. Harvard Row Mall Southfield, MI 48076 Free Professional Measure at No Obligation Free in Home Design Consulting Gal • American Heart Association ‘w ALL NAME BRANDS Hours: Mon.-Sa . 10-5 Neon Rochester Hills 651-5009 Gary I. War Attorney At Law 30300 Northwestern Highway Suite 120 Farmington Hills (313) 932-3540 Downtiver Area Office (313) 381-8480 Criminal Law, Wills and Estates, Civil Litigation, Divorce, Collections, Real Estate, Drunk Driving "Your Best Defense" FREE Municipal Bonds Listing Receive Weekly Report VM.M tt ar,RAVA N ORROPV01. Tel Aviv (JTA) — Reserve Brig. Gen. Arieh Shalev, a prominent former military intelligence officer, has pro- posed a detailed plan calling for a staged Israeli withdrawal from the Golan Heights in conjunction with a gradual implementation of full peace with Syria. Gen. Shalev, an expert on Israeli-Syrian security ar- rangements who repre- sented Israel in armistice negotiations with Syria in the 1950s, proposes that Israel pull out from nearly all of the Golan Heights, es- tablishing a new border two to three miles east of the old 1948 armistice line. Gen. Shalev has set forth his ideas in a new book called Peace and Security in the Golan, sure to be fiercely attacked by opposition and right-wing nationalist poli- ticians, for whom withdrawal from any part of the Golan is anathema. Currently a senior resear- ch associate at Tel Aviv University's Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies, Gen. Shalev published the book earlier this month. The Shalev plan contains four stages, each of which comprises three elements: a limited Israeli withdrawal, security arrangements, and an additional step toward peaceful relations and nor- malization between Israel and Syria. The first stage would be launched upon signing a peace treaty ending the for- mal state of war now ex- isting between the two coun- tries, Gen. Shalev writes. Syria would agree to end its economic boycott of Israel and permanently settle half the Palestinian refugees liv- ing in Syria. Both countries would in- troduce security ar- rangements designed to pre- vent accidental clashes, in- cluding an obligation to in- form the other of large-scale military exercises or movements. The Israeli withdrawal at this first stage would be quite limited, unless Syria agrees to decrease the size of its active ground forces and deploy only one or two divi- sions between the Israeli lines and Damascus. The second stage of the agreement would see the opening of a Syrian Embassy in Jerusalem and an Israeli . Embassy in Damascus. The border should be open to movement of people and goods. Syria would complete resettlement of the Palestin- ian refugees residing in its territory, and other Arab countries should settle a quarter of the Palestinian refugees living outside Syria. Gen. Shalev advocates an overall settlement of the refugee problem, involving several Arab states, because he fears that failure to solve this problem could torpedo the entire peace process. In exchange, Israel would withdraw from the strategic hills in the eastern Golan to a more western row of hills, and an American or multinational force would replace those forces. The third stage would in- clude Syrian-Israeli econ- omic and political coopera- The Shalev plan contains four stages. tion, a reduction of Syria's military forces by half, limi- tations on both sides' ar- maments and further Israeli withdrawals. In the fourth and final stage, full normalization and peace, at a "level which ex- ists today between Western European states," would be established between Israel and Syria. All the Palestinian refu- gees would be resettled in Arab states, Syria and Israel should enjoy "strategic co- operation," and democratic regimes would be in place in the Arab states. Israel would then pull the Jewish settlements from the Golan, and the Israeli army would withdraw to a new international border, two or three miles east of the old armistice lines. The narrow strip of former Syrian territory to be held permanently by Israel would enable Israel to control the few routes needed in an emergency to rush troops to the Heights. Control of that small strip would also make it impossi- ble for Syria to interfere with the flow of water from Ole Baniyas to the Jordan River. .